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Chapter 3

Chapter 3. Traditional Policing. Introduction. Traditional policing Amounts to throwing money at the crime problem Is unimaginative Traditional policing strategies include Hiring cops Freeing up resources Random, preventive patrol Rapid response Residency requirements

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Chapter 3

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  1. Chapter 3 Traditional Policing

  2. Introduction • Traditional policing • Amounts to throwing money at the crime problem • Is unimaginative • Traditional policing strategies include • Hiring cops • Freeing up resources • Random, preventive patrol • Rapid response • Residency requirements • College degrees for cops • Also add private security

  3. The Theory of Traditional Policing • Traditional policing prizes deterrence theory • Who cares? • Some people cannot necessarily be deterred

  4. Reasons Why Hiring More Cops May Not Reduce Crime • There are several reasons why hiring more cops may not reduce crime • Police officers can’t work around the clock • Shift work, sick leave, vacations, transferring suspects, and paperwork reduce the police presence • Some cities have fewer police per citizen than others but less crime • Police are not necessarily capable of deterring certain types of crime (e.g., crimes committed behind closed doors and out of view)

  5. Lessons From Kansas City • The famous Kansas City experiment divided the city into • Proactive beats (with a stepped-up police presence) • Reactive beats (police only responded to calls for service) • Control beats (business as usual) • Findings • No significant reductions in proactive beat • People didn’t even notice!

  6. The Post-Kansas City Intellectual Debate • The Kansas City experiment prompted many researchers to explore the relationship between police levels and crime • The findings • ??????

  7. The Violent Crime Control Act of 1994 • $ Billions to local law enforcement • “COPS Office” created • 100,000 new cops • Has the Act made a difference? • One recent study concludes it has • Authors claimed that increases in hiring reduce violent and property crimes

  8. What Happens When the Police go on Strike? • Several researchers have explored what happens to crime when the police go on strike • Findings? • Increase in crime during Helsinki, Finland police strike • Increase in crime during Montreal police strike • Both studies dealt with strikes far in the past • Today police are often prohibited by law from striking • Who cares? • The police strike-crime relationship offers evidence that additional hiring won’t be counterproductive and that police are essential

  9. Does it Work? • Hiring more cops is not counterproductive • Recent studies show more cops = less crime • Police strike literature tells us the police perform a valuable function • We cannot conclude with 100% certainty that hiring more cops reduces crime, but it certainly helps

  10. Freeing Up Resources • If hiring is not possible, then “cutting the fat” and freeing up police resources may help • Methods of freeing up resources include • Eliminating two officer patrols and replacing them with one officer patrols • Implementing 311 systems • Carefully examining (and possibly changing) what officers do while on the clock

  11. One Versus Two Officer Patrols • Studies on one versus two officer patrols have concluded that • Patrol staffing mode has almost no effect on police effectiveness • Single-officer staffing increases visibility, but has almost no effect on crime • Two officer patrols are (big surprise) twice as costly as one officer patrols • Patrol activity levels are comparable between both staffing methods

  12. 311 • 311 alternative to 911 • Why would 311 affect crime? • Frees up time • Does 311 work? • There’s almost no research available on 311 • Available research shows • 311 may reduce overall calls to 911 • 311 does not reduce officer response time • 311 does not free up uncommitted blocks of time

  13. Patrol Downtime Studies • Some studies show that as much as 60 percent of police officers’ time on duty is uncommitted (they are dated, however) • Does it work? • Who knows….

  14. Reactive Policing • Reactive policing is not very effective • How do we know? • Comparisons of crime rates and arrest rate • Not much of a link between crime rate and arrest rate • Targeted arrests (e.g., domestic violence)

  15. Rapid Response • Many people feel that getting cops to the scene of a crime faster will reduce crime • What does the research show? • No clear relationship between response time and probability of arrest • Few crimes are “hot”

  16. Random Patrol • Can police officers deter crime by randomly driving around? • Probably not • Why? • Kansas City Experiment

  17. Does it Work? • Reactive and random policing is not effective

  18. Bring in the Detectives • Some 60% of police personnel are assigned to patrol while 15% are assigned to investigations. • The RAND study- the original study found that investigations often did not result in arrest of a guilty party. • The RAND study was conducted in 1975 there has been little published evidence to date to refute the original findings.

  19. Private Policing • Private police outnumber public police 3 to 1 • Store detectives • Security guards • Why private police? • Privatization • Mass private property • Public police ineffective • Does it work? • Probably suffers the same fate of other policing methods already discussed

  20. College Degrees for Cops • Advantages • Broader base for decision-making • Arguments against • Restricted applicant pool • Education does not improve crime fighting abilities • What does the research show? • Don’t know if crime is affected • May affect decisions to use force

  21. Summary and Conclusion • Chapter 3 summary and conclusion.

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